to expose oneself to criticism/ridicule/danger—exponerse a las críticas/al ridículo/al peligro

Our mission is to introduce entrepreneurs to the art of effective networking and to expose them to resources that will assist them in attracting new markets.

This father also reported that he took his son ‘everywhere’ with him, not only to expose him to a variety of experiences, but also for him to walk for exercise.

Their lack of knowledge and the context for much of the knowledge they are exposed to shapes their world.

Many Americans were first exposed to Breillat's films through Romance, a critically touted but unpopular film.

I learned this through the field experiences that exposed me to different cultures.

Clinicians can mentor students placed in the perioperative area and expose them to aspects of perioperative nursing that first interested these educators in this specialty.

‘We lived in the Mount Baker area so she could be exposed to diverse socioeconomic communities,’ said her father.

As an undergraduate, mathematics had been his preferred subject and he was exposed to political economy only in an introductory course taught by Hadley.

The idea was to give a venue to its young members for getting stage experience as well as expose them to the world of film classics.

Each day had something new for the children, exposing them to various knowledge inputs.

They report great success with the store, since it offers a great way for the reading public to be exposed to comics - and maybe even buy some!

When I was four or five years old, my parents decided they'd had enough of the city life and moved into a very rural area about 30 miles from Austin, exposing me to a completely new side of American culture.

This is important as it constantly exposes me to different types of knowledge and perspectives on life.

During our quest for knowledge, we are exposed to a variety of research studies based on different research designs.

While providing an environment in which students can work with top experts in specialized areas, the project also aims to expose them to other disciplines.

Having grown up and lived in a very multicultural area of London, I have been exposed to many forms of religion.

This is a youth sports programme that provides all children with the opportunity to actively participate in physical education by exposing them to skills and knowledge of individual sports.

It brings a challenge but it exposes you to different business areas.

The children would add information to the projects as they were exposed to new knowledge.

Apart from providing a platform for emerging artists, the festival aims to lure people into the inner city and expose them to the venues and positive developments in the area.

2

2.1

(secret/scandal/crime)poner al descubierto

(crime/secret/scandal)sacar a la luz

(weaknesses/inefficiency)poner en evidencia

Perhaps they are just too shy and tender to expose their sensitive and creative sides to the cruel world.

In the final analysis though, this film too, exposes the darker and more savage aspect of ‘civilized’ urban society.

The overwhelming musical score and the too consistent whirling dervish camera only work to expose the film's desperate bid to keep its core vapidity under wraps.

The newspaper lost face when one of its reporters was exposed as a plagiarist.

His intention to become ordained was thwarted when he was exposed as an agnostic and his religious scepticism caused suspicion in the university.

The former chief executive is set to sue the club in a move that could see the turmoil surrounding his replacement's ruthless takeover exposed in open court.

The Stevens report has exposed what that means - the state organising and covering up the murder of innocent people.

The party chair race has exposed deep fissures within the Democratic Party.

Yet he loves to expose those in the public eye, especially Tory politicians, for sleaze.

The reporter was exposed as a fraud last year after complaints from staff and readers that some of his stories appeared to be copied from other newspapers.

However in recent years this reputation has been exposed as a sham.

From now on, all such information will no longer be exposed to the public.

Suddenly he is exposed as just another coach.

The big issue is, if she's exposed as a fraud before we get our house keys back, I don't want her to go in a tiff and get them duplicated and such.

The answer is you point out that plagiarists will be exposed and shamed in public - and this is exactly what happened two decades ago with the VC.

Isn't there advantage in exposing the fissures within society itself?

He was exposed as a man who thinks so little of the ethics of high office that he lobbied on ministerial letterhead to get his son off a traffic offence.

After their bowling inadequacies were exposed earlier in the series, Australia gambled this time by dropping a batsman.

How on earth can he make light of being publicly exposed as a liar?

The truth is he did not, which further exposes his hypocrisy and irresponsibility.

We have seen that similar roles of the press are developing there too as media expose corruption.

But just before 1.15 pm on Wednesday, the Prime Minister was exposed as either a liar or an incompetent.

He was officially exposed as a spy by then Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher in 1979 and was stripped of his knighthood.

But there are also other developmental and infrastructural stories that need to be exposed by the media.

He was exposed as a double agent in the mid 1980s and relocated in mainland Britain.

The problems have largely been of confidence and that has often been exposed at the French Open, where she seems to suffer from the burden of home expectation and has a relatively poor record.

The applicant, at trial, was effectively exposed as a sham.

I was exposed as a neat freak when I house-sat for my editor.

An inclination to tyranny has seldom been so readily exposed by a public figure.

I fear that I'll betray my lack of formal film education and be exposed for the fraud that I am.

Real whistleblowers expose wrongdoing while it is going on.

Companies which had flourished when no one examined them too closely were suddenly exposed as shams.

On the day Laois were cruelly punished as a rampant Tyrone side tore them apart and cruelly exposed their frailties.

Will the results of such an investigation even be exposed to public view?

Those issues aside, many citizens want the tribunals to be very public - both to expose the past's horrors and to prove that justice is done.

He was exposed as the worst sort of politician we have in this Parliament.

Losing the vote would not mean the end of his government, but would be an embarrassment and expose the fissures within the 20-party ruling coalition.

2.2

(swindler/criminal)desenmascarar

3

Fotografía

exponer

Some images are printed using the Lightjet, a digital enlarger that exposes photographic paper with red, green and blue lasers.

I mainly use the meter setting of 3200 at the camera to expose the film.

Her work makes excellent use of what looks like badly exposed outdated Polaroid film.

In the traditional darkroom, a photographer makes a print by projecting light through the original piece of film, which exposes the paper.

Until the early 1900s, photographic films had to be exposed for some 10 seconds.